A Study of Clinical Coding Accuracy in Surgery: Implications for the Use of Administrative Big Data for Outcomes Management. Issue 6 (June 2015)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- A Study of Clinical Coding Accuracy in Surgery: Implications for the Use of Administrative Big Data for Outcomes Management. Issue 6 (June 2015)
- Main Title:
- A Study of Clinical Coding Accuracy in Surgery
- Authors:
- Nouraei, S. A. R.
Hudovsky, A.
Frampton, A. E.
Mufti, U.
White, N.B.
Wathen, C. G.
Sandhu, G. S.
Darzi, A. - Abstract:
- Abstract : Background: Clinical coding is the translation of clinical activity into a coded language. Coded data drive hospital reimbursement and are used for audit and research, and benchmarking and outcomes management purposes. Methods: We undertook a 2-center audit of coding accuracy across surgery. Clinician-auditor multidisciplinary teams reviewed the coding of 30, 127 patients and assessed accuracy at primary and secondary diagnosis and procedure levels, morbidity level, complications assignment, and financial variance. Postaudit data of a randomly selected sample of 400 cases were reaudited by an independent team. Results: At least 1 coding change occurred in 15, 402 patients (51%). There were 3911 (13%) and 3620 (12%) changes to primary diagnoses and procedures, respectively. In 5183 (17%) patients, the Health Resource Grouping changed, resulting in income variance of £3, 974, 544 (+6.2%). The morbidity level changed in 2116 (7%) patients ( P < 0.001). The number of assigned complications rose from 2597 (8.6%) to 2979 (9.9%) ( P < 0.001). Reaudit resulted in further primary diagnosis and procedure changes in 8.7% and 4.8% of patients, respectively. Conclusions: The coded data are a key engine for knowledge-driven health care provision. They are used, increasingly at individual surgeon level, to benchmark performance. Surgical clinical coding is prone to subjectivity, variability, and error (SVE). Having a specialty-by-specialty understanding of the nature andAbstract : Background: Clinical coding is the translation of clinical activity into a coded language. Coded data drive hospital reimbursement and are used for audit and research, and benchmarking and outcomes management purposes. Methods: We undertook a 2-center audit of coding accuracy across surgery. Clinician-auditor multidisciplinary teams reviewed the coding of 30, 127 patients and assessed accuracy at primary and secondary diagnosis and procedure levels, morbidity level, complications assignment, and financial variance. Postaudit data of a randomly selected sample of 400 cases were reaudited by an independent team. Results: At least 1 coding change occurred in 15, 402 patients (51%). There were 3911 (13%) and 3620 (12%) changes to primary diagnoses and procedures, respectively. In 5183 (17%) patients, the Health Resource Grouping changed, resulting in income variance of £3, 974, 544 (+6.2%). The morbidity level changed in 2116 (7%) patients ( P < 0.001). The number of assigned complications rose from 2597 (8.6%) to 2979 (9.9%) ( P < 0.001). Reaudit resulted in further primary diagnosis and procedure changes in 8.7% and 4.8% of patients, respectively. Conclusions: The coded data are a key engine for knowledge-driven health care provision. They are used, increasingly at individual surgeon level, to benchmark performance. Surgical clinical coding is prone to subjectivity, variability, and error (SVE). Having a specialty-by-specialty understanding of the nature and clinical significance of informatics variability and adopting strategies to reduce it, are necessary to allow accurate assumptions and informed decisions to be made concerning the scope and clinical applicability of administrative data in surgical outcomes improvement. Abstract : This is the study of the accuracy of the administrative data using a sample of more than 30, 000 individually reviewed case notes. The administrative data are the most comprehensive source of clinical activity but not historically designed for clinical outcomes management. This study investigates the utility of this data set for surgical clinical outcome improvement. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Annals of surgery. Volume 261:Issue 6(2015:Jun.)
- Journal:
- Annals of surgery
- Issue:
- Volume 261:Issue 6(2015:Jun.)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 261, Issue 6 (2015)
- Year:
- 2015
- Volume:
- 261
- Issue:
- 6
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2015-0261-0006-0000
- Page Start:
- Page End:
- Publication Date:
- 2015-06
- Subjects:
- big data -- clinical coding -- health informatics -- health resource groupings -- outcome management
Surgery -- Periodicals
617.005 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.annalsofsurgery.com ↗
http://journals.lww.com ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1097/SLA.0000000000000851 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 0003-4932
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - 1044.500000
British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library STI - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 5240.xml